07/2005

|
High Tech behind Old Walls
The new Swiss Parliament media centre opts for a
sound control room with AURUS / NEXUS

Buttenheim, July 2005: Outdated technology, not
enough workplaces: Journalists have suffered from bad working conditions
at the Swiss parliament – the Bundeshaus (Federal House) – for
quite a while. The same was true for the local production facilities
used by the SRG (Swiss Broadcasting Service) which is responsible for
broadcasts from the Bundeshaus. Yet this is to change now: A new centre
for the media named Bundesmedienhaus is currently being erected in
a 19th century building complex close to the parliament. After completion
(scheduled for May 2006) the centre will house not only modern workplaces
but also a new central multimedia-control room with an AURUS/NEXUS
system. From this control room all video and audio will be made available
for TV broadcasts in the future. The agreement on the installation
at that prominent place was recently signed by SALZBRENNER STAGETEC
MEDIAGROUP and Thomson – general contractor in charge of audio
and video systems.
The core of the new control room is an AURUS with 32
channel strips, 80 audio channels, and 64 buses in a mainframe allowing
the desk to be extended to 48 channel strips in future. A star-topology
network of nine NEXUS base devices and a NEXUS STAR is used for routing
all audio signals between the plenary assembly hall, the CCR, and the
control room. A specialty about the installation is that the broadcast
audio must be made available in multiple languages as German, Italian,
French, and Rhaeto-Romanic is spoken in Switzerland. For that reason,
a program feed mixed from the hall-microphone signals will first be
created using the AURUS – an approach known from large international
productions. The commentary voice-overs in the four languages will
be added to the feed later. The four commentary signals are recorded
directly to the audio tracks of the cameras, thus ensuring audio/video
synchronicity also for subsequent mixdowns. The NEXUS SDI board is
the perfect partner for this approach: “Using the XSDI board
in the NEXUS allows for de-embedding the audio from the video stream,
processing it, and re-embedding it to the video – without any
latency. The ability of acting as de-embedder and embedder simultaneously
and in real-time is one of the major benefits of the XSDI board,” says
the MEDIAGROUP managing engineer in charge of the project Sebastian
Schmidt.

The installation at the Bundesmedienhaus in Bern
has already been the fourth large-scale order from Switzerland for
the SALZBRENNER STAGETEC MEDIAGROUP within a single year. Another NEXUS
system was recently completed at the Paul Klee Zentrum that is located
in Bern, too. The audio network at the Hallenstadion in Zurich is almost
complete, and another AURUS system was delivered to tpc Zurich AG for
their new HDTV OB Truck.
Thus, the AURUS consolidates its leading market
position as one of the most successful mixing consoles in the range
of digital high-end systems: 26 AURUS consoles have been sold only
in 2005, and more than 50 systems have been sold to customers in
Europe, the U.S., and Asia since the desk was launched in 2003. |